Suspected insurgents kill 9 at Afghan party

The attack on a pre-wedding gathering in rural Afghanistan may have been directed at a clan member who was a government administrator. The Taliban has a history of targeting local officials to discourage cooperation with the West.

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan — It was supposed to have been a festive occasion: a pre-wedding party, held under the stars on a warm night. But suspected insurgent gunmen burst in on the gathering in a village field Thursday, fatally shooting nine men, including the groom, Afghan officials said.

Grieving family members and provincial officials said the attack, which took place around 1 a.m. in a remote area of Afghanistan's Nangarhar province, might have been due to the fact that a relative of the targeted clan served as the district administrator. The Taliban movement has declared that anyone serving the Afghan government, even in such a relatively humble post, can be marked for death.

Across Afghanistan dozens of local and provincial officials have been assassinated in recent months or, in some cases, had narrow escapes. Favored insurgent methods are suicide bombings or ambushes as the victims drive to or from work. Often bystanders die as well, sometimes in large numbers.

Senior government officials such as Cabinet ministers are generally protected by elaborate layers of security. But lesser functionaries, particularly in the countryside, make far easier targets.

The campaign of killings is meant to discourage anyone from cooperating with the central government or the Western military. The United States and its NATO allies consider good governance, from the local level on up, to be an essential element of their counterinsurgency strategy. But the methodical strikes against officialdom make it extremely difficult to attract qualified people willing to undertake the risk that public service entails.

Police sometimes look to clan rivalries to explain attacks such as the one in Nangarhar's Dor Baba district. However, the family, supported by local authorities, insisted it had no enemies.

The district chief who may have been the target, Haji Hamisha Gul, did not attend the gathering. He said he had business in the district center. But he confirmed the list of the dead: his cousin, the groom; the groom's father, uncle and brother; two cousins and three other members of the extended family. Five others were injured.

Nangarhar Gov. Gul Agha Sherzai, who has escaped a number of assassination attempts, said in a statement that he was saddened by the attack and had ordered a full investigation.

Elsewhere, the NATO force said two service members had been killed by explosions in Afghanistan's south, but gave no other details and did not provide the nationalities of those who died. The south, together with areas of the east along the border with Pakistan, has been the country's principal battleground. Most of the U.S. troops sent as part of the military buildup ordered by President Obama were deployed in Helmand and Kandahar provinces in the south, which account for the largest numbers of Western battle fatalities.

American troops make up about two-thirds of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's 150,000-member force. The White House is expected to disclose soon the scope of a pullback set to begin next month.